Read ebooks, magazines, and newspapers, listen to audiobooks and music, and watch streaming videos for free with a Thousand Oaks Library card. Some services require account creation after verifying your library card number and PIN. Checkout limits vary by service, so make sure to check your accounts regularly.
Read eMagazines through a web browser, on tablets or smartphones. Flipster, a digital magazine platform that allows you to read most popular titles, including Bon Appetit, Cosmopolitan, O: The Oprah Magazine, Golf Digest, Traveller, and People. For details please visit Read Listen Watch page.
Freegal offers 24 hours of streaming per day and five (5) MP3 downloads per week for unlimited users. The catalog includes over 18 million songs, millions of albums, hundreds of curated playlists, and the ability to create your own. The collection is comprised of music from over 90,000+ labels, with music originating in over 100 countries. Please visit Read Listen Watch page for more information.
A streaming video service offering more than 26,000 films. It includes award-winning documentary and feature films, with titles from PBS, BBC, Criterion Collection, Media Education Foundation, and more. For details please visit Read Listen Watch page.
The world’s premier resource for classical music programming: stunning live events from the world’s most prestigious halls, plus thousands of concerts, operas, ballets, and more! For details please visit Read Listen Watch page.Please download the instruction for Creating an Individual User Account.
The Palace Project app is a free library-lending platform and ereader app for Apple and Android devices. In addition to granting Thousand oaks Library card holders access to all of our OverDrive/Libby e-books and e-audiobooks, the Palace Project grants readers free access to materials held in the California State Library's Palace Marketplace collection, the Palace Bookshelf of open materials, and the California Enki BiblioBoard collection. Patrons can borrow up to 10 checkout items and up to 10 reserved items.
This project was supported in part by the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, administered in California by the State Librarian.